becasue of encoding on your computer, i guess
コナー
Eclipse in Japanese is Nisshoku (knee-show-coo) - Japanese symbols - 日食
If you mean shogun, typically pronounced in English as "show-guhn," the correct Japanese pronunciation is "show-goon."
Proofreading symbols are used to correct rough drafts. These symbols typically include marks like a caret (^) to indicate where a word or phrase should be inserted, a squiggly line (~) to show where a word should be deleted, and a circle with a line through it to denote a spelling error.
Square boxes means the charactor isn't reconized by the system. Terry
Sorry I can't show you the symbols - my laptop won't let me - but it is pronounced "genki des ka?". Hope that helped!
If you want to write in mordan japanesse you can write it as Michelle. I wish I had a japanese computer to show u how to write it in regular Japanese writing. Am Japanese myself. Am Azuky Nakahara
Sorry I can't show you the symbols - my laptop won't let me - but it is pronounced "Oi!Anata! Hai! Anata!". Hope that helped!
You probably don't have the Japanese language pack installed into your computer. If you have Windows, try:START --> CONTROL PANELREGIONAL AND LANGUAGE OPTIONSKEYBOARDS AND LANGUAGES tabCHANGE KEYBOARDSADD --> Select JAPAN (JP; Microsoft IME)Good luck!
nothing
Yes. The meanings of the symbols can be found in the maps key.
Five threes do not equal ten, so you can't use symbols to show that.